Difference between revisions of "Preparing a Patch for Review"

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<h2>Best Practices</h2>
 
<h2>Best Practices</h2>
  
* Avoid saving tab characters in the patch. The main reason is that different text editors use different defaults to interpret tab characters as spaces. Also some people like to set 8 spaces as the default for a tab character while others prefer 4 or 3. The end result is that the proposed code will look unformatted, making hard to the eye to read and follow the code indentations.
+
* Avoid saving tab characters in the patch. The main reason is that different text editors use different defaults to interpret tab characters as spaces. Also some people like to set 8 spaces as the default for a tab character while others prefer 4 or 3. The end result is that the proposed code will look unformatted, making hard to the eye to read and follow the code indentations. Possible ways to teach your text editor:
 +
 
 +
For vi family set the following in your .exrc:
 +
set expandtab
 +
 
 +
For emacs family add the following to your .emacs:
 +
(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil);

Revision as of 21:18, 30 August 2012

Best Practices

  • Avoid saving tab characters in the patch. The main reason is that different text editors use different defaults to interpret tab characters as spaces. Also some people like to set 8 spaces as the default for a tab character while others prefer 4 or 3. The end result is that the proposed code will look unformatted, making hard to the eye to read and follow the code indentations. Possible ways to teach your text editor:

For vi family set the following in your .exrc:

set expandtab

For emacs family add the following to your .emacs:

(setq-default indent-tabs-mode nil);